A Manual of Inorganic Chemistry: Arranged to Facilitate the Experimental Demonstration of the Facts and Principles of the ScienceIvison, Phinney, Blakeman, and Company, 1868 - 605 páginas |
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Página xii
... Silver . Metallic silver . The term metal . silver . Occurrence of silver . Extraction of silver . Indelible ink . Oxides of silver . The daguerreotype . Photography on glass . of silver . Atomic weight of silver . Bromide of silver ...
... Silver . Metallic silver . The term metal . silver . Occurrence of silver . Extraction of silver . Indelible ink . Oxides of silver . The daguerreotype . Photography on glass . of silver . Atomic weight of silver . Bromide of silver ...
Página xiii
... silver from lead . Oxides of lead . Corrosion of lead by water . Leaden water - pipes . Suboxide of lead . Protoxide of lead or litharge . Cupellation . Peroxide of lead . Red lead or minium . Sesquioxide of lead . Sul- phides of lead ...
... silver from lead . Oxides of lead . Corrosion of lead by water . Leaden water - pipes . Suboxide of lead . Protoxide of lead or litharge . Cupellation . Peroxide of lead . Red lead or minium . Sesquioxide of lead . Sul- phides of lead ...
Página 6
... silver , platinum , and a few other exceedingly rare metals , all the metals burn , or rust , when heated in the air . If no air be present , this rust or ashes will not be formed , however long or intensely the metal may be heated ...
... silver , platinum , and a few other exceedingly rare metals , all the metals burn , or rust , when heated in the air . If no air be present , this rust or ashes will not be formed , however long or intensely the metal may be heated ...
Página 72
... silver , we shall find it possible to express the resulting molecule of nitrate of silver by two formulæ , either of which will represent COMBINING WEIGHT OF NITRIC ACID . 73 correctly the proportions.
... silver , we shall find it possible to express the resulting molecule of nitrate of silver by two formulæ , either of which will represent COMBINING WEIGHT OF NITRIC ACID . 73 correctly the proportions.
Página 73
... silver . Water . 2AgNO , + H2O . Now there is a class of metals which enter into reactions in the manner of silver in the above equations ; and there is another class , of which lead may be taken as an example ; and the difference ...
... silver . Water . 2AgNO , + H2O . Now there is a class of metals which enter into reactions in the manner of silver in the above equations ; and there is another class , of which lead may be taken as an example ; and the difference ...
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Términos y frases comunes
acid gas alkaline ammonia ammonium anhydrous antimony antozone aqueous solution arsenic arsenious acid atomic weight bismuth boiling bottle bromine burning calcium carbonate of sodium carbonic acid caustic charcoal chemical chlorhydric acid chlorine cold color colorless combination combustion composition compounds condensed contains converted cooled copper cork crystals decomposed decomposition delivery-tube deposited dilute dissolved distilled elements employed evolved experiment exposed flame flask formed formula gases glass tube gramme grms hydrate hydrogen ignition-tube insoluble iodine iron lead liquid melted mercury metal mixed mixture molecule nitrate nitric acid nitrogen obtained ordinary temperature oxide oxygen ozone pass phosphoric acid phosphorus phosphuretted hydrogen platinum porcelain portion potassium powder precipitate prepared produced properties proportion pure quantity reaction readily salt sesquioxide silicic silicic acid silver sodium solid soluble in water specific gravity substance sulphate sulphide sulphuric acid sulphydric take fire terchloride teroxide tersulphide tion unit-volume vapor volatile volume wire zinc
Pasajes populares
Página 66 - ... three, four, or five volumes of oxygen, and with no other proportions whatsoever. As for volumes, so for weights; the proportional weight of oxygen in these oxides rises by definite leaps from the first member of the series to the last. This definite...
Página xxx - Open dishes, which will bear heat without cracking, are necessary implements in the laboratory for conducting the evaporation of liquids. The best evaporating-dishes are those made of Berlin porcelain, glazed both inside and out, and provided with a little lip projecting beyond the rim. The dishes made of Meissen porcelain are not glazed on the outside, and are not so durable as those of Berlin manufacture ; but they are much cheaper, and with proper care last a long time. The small Berlin dishes...
Página 13 - Place a piece of charcoal — that of bark is best — in a deflagrating spoon. Kindle the charcoal by holding it in the flame of a lamp, and then introduce it into a bottle of oxygen. It will burn vividly, throwing off brilliant sparks if bark charcoal has been employed. In this experiment, as in the preceding, the products of the combustion are obviously gaseous, no solid substance being formed.
Página 26 - ... the gaseous mixture by causing the current of the induction-coil to leap, in the form of a spark, between the platinum points. The gases combine with an explosion ; which is, however, much mitigated in violence by the elastic action of the above-mentioned air column. At the high temperature employed (132°), the water formed retains the gaseous condition. On removing the cork, and allowing the 54 VOLUME-RATIO OF HYDROGEN AND NITROGEN IN AMMONIA.
Página 107 - ... contain chlorine. 107. At the ordinary temperature chlorine is a gas of yellowishgreen color, 2-5 times as heavy as atmospheric air. Its specific gravity and atomic weight are 35-5. It is excessively irritating and suffocating, even when inhaled in exceedingly small quantities. Any attempt to breathe the undiluted gas would undoubtedly be fatal. Under a pressure of 4 atmospheres at 15° it is condensed to a yellow mobile liquid, having a sp. gr. of 1-33 ; this liquid has never yet been solidified....
Página 492 - Heat a small fragment of lead upon charcoal in the oxidizing flame of the blowpipe, and observe the gray film of suboxide which forms at first, and the yellow incrustation of litharge which is obtained subsequently. The litharge may be melted if a strong, hot flame be thrown upon it.
Página xxii - ... is necessary, U-tubes have the advantage of compactness; for many can be hung upon one short frame. The upright cylinder may be from 25 cm to 40 cm in height.
Página xvii - A, while the second, 6, starts from the bottom of B and just enters the arched top of A without projecting into it ; d is a short, large tube, sloping upwards and outwards, and capable of being tightly closed with a cork or caoutchouc stopper ; g is a glass gauge to show the height of the water in the vessel A ; e is the discharge-pipe. To fill the gasholder with water, close d, open the stopcocks a, b, and e, and pour water into the cistern B ; the water entering A will expel the air through...
Página 105 - It can not be well collected over water at the ordinary temperature, since it is rather easily soluble therein ; though the difficulty may be obviated in part by evolving the gas rapidly, or by passing the deliverytube to the top of the bottle in which the gas is collected. It must not be left standing over water, since it would soon be entirely absorbed. In experimenting with chlorine, care must always be taken not to inhale it. The reaction which occurs in this experiment may be thus formulated...
Página 33 - In the form of ice, and as it falls from the clouds as rain or snow, it is, indeed, tolerably free from foreign substances ; but after having once soaked into the ground, it becomes charged with a variety of mineral and other substances, which, being soluble in water, are dissolved by it as it trickles through the earth. Where the proportion of soluble matter contained in the water is unusually large, and particularly if it possesses marked medicinal properties, the water is called mineral water,...